Week 1 of 52: Short Term Emergency Food Supply (List 1)

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Week 1 of 52: Short Term Emergency Food Supply (List 1)

FEMA suggests that each family have a 2 week supply of food and water for their home. Starting a food supply does not have to be a budget breaker. By slowly accumulating emergency supplies, you will not feel the financial “burn” compared to having to pay for everything up front. Therefore, keeping in mind what type of emergencies that you are planning for, if there are any family members with medical needs, how long you want your food supply to last, and so on, will help you make the best choice for your family.

Taking time to read the nutritional information on the back of the food source and knowing other considerations, will help a person make the best choices for their needs. If a person needs to use their stashed food supply, having foods high in vitamins, nutrients, and proteins will provide their body with what it needs for needed energy and mental clarity.

Preps to Buy:

1 gallon of water per day for each family member or Datrex water pouches (Ensure that you have enough water for 2 weeks and remember that having more water stored up is better than being short on this essential supply).

1 large container of dry food – This amount should last 2 weeks or longer

Action Items:

Date perishable goods with a marker

If possible, set aside $20 to use for emergencies

Make a disaster plan and decide what types of disasters you are planning for (weather related, natural disasters, economic or personal disasters)

Decide upon an out-of-area contact who can coordinate information with friends and family members.

Once the out-of-area contact has been decided, email or call the newly designated emergency contact and provide phone numbers and names of family members for them to call.

Tess Pennington is the author of The Prepper’s Blueprint, a comprehensive guide that uses real-life scenarios to help you prepare for any disaster. Because a crisis rarely stops with a triggering event the aftermath can spiral, having the capacity to cripple our normal ways of life. The well-rounded, multi-layered approach outlined in the Blueprint helps you make sense of a wide array of preparedness concepts through easily digestible action items and supply lists.

Tess is also the author of the highly rated Prepper’s Cookbook, which helps you to create a plan for stocking, organizing and maintaining a proper emergency food supply and includes over 300 recipes for nutritious, delicious, life-saving meals.

Visit her web site at ReadyNutrition.com for an extensive compilation of free information on preparedness, homesteading, and healthy living.

I absolutely love this… My family is prepared for much more than two weeks, but this is a FABULOUS start for anyone. I’ll be sharing this all over the place…

Thanks!

Stealth Spaniel

OMG! I love this! Trying to get “just started preppers” on board is hard. They imagine spending $6000 that they don’t have at Costco. This makes it so easy to explain the process of gradually building your supply. It also makes the process seem do-able. Thank you!!

Anna Mercken

This is great. But when I went shopping, I wondered what is a can of meat (a little can of tuna), or a can of juice (the big Costco size). A little more explanation would help.

Jon

There are two guidelines to follow for those kinds of decisions, and they may seem obvious but many people over-think these things. First, the nutritional data on the packaging of whatever foods you are purchasing will provide you with serving sizes, the number of servings per package, and the number of servings recommended daily. In a perfect world, you could use this information to decide what serving size will be required for each of the members of your family or the group that you are purchasing for.

Since we don’t live in a perfect world and the educated guess would be that you are preparing for rough times, the second guideline is to take into account not only that strict rationing may not just be a benefit but a life-saver, so high-calorie diets will be preferable when they can be provided, especially given that any collapse of modern conveniences will undoubtedly require greater physical exertions from people planning to not only survive, but to do so in relative “comfort”.

With that in mind, you should consider things like the individuals that you are purchasing for, specifically their metabolic rates during high-exertion periods. It is not always possible or feasible to plan for such things, so one good estimation would be to run a daily calorie count for each individual over a period of time, and then try to provide a diet that adds a buffer of half of that number to double in order to provide a little “breathing room”. If you can do this, then even in the worst conditions you will have a little extra on the table as it were, for not only providing nutrition, but under better circumstances you may also wind up with a surplus from which you can barter or provide charity. If your kids drink two glasses of juice per day, then a small amount might seem like enough- but the more you have on hand, the longer you can stretch that ration, and they might need more once they are forced by circumstance into doing more labor-intensive tasks such as gathering or chopping wood for the fire.

If you can afford it, go for the big can of tuna and the Costco sized juice canister.

Bonnie

I really, really appreciate the work you have done on this. I especially love that so many of your tips are arranged as lists. That makes carrying out the prep easier to do — even easier to read. Thank you again.

http://www.readynutrition.com Tess Pennington

Thanks Bonnie,

I appreciate the positive feedback. If you haven’t noticed, I love lists. I know that a lot of you are exactly like myself: busy in their personal lives, home lives and professional lives… and lists seem to be the most efficient way of putting things in order and getting the work accomplished.

Take care and thank you again for your encouraging comment.

Tess

Chris Michelson

Thank you very much for all the information that you have put together. Your lists are very good. They have made the planning so much easier. Great job! Thanks again.

http://www.readynutrition.com Tess Pennington

@ Chris,

Thanks so much, I really appreciate the feedback.

Tess

Sheryl

I also love the lists. I copied and printed out for a friend of mine. I have been talking to them about getting started. This will help them picture where we are gong.
Thank you.

Dave

One of the replies hit on something had to think through. What size can of meat?
I was buying the # 10 cans of everything because they were cheaper. Well after thinking it through that the canned food was what was going to be eaten after the food in the fridg. / freezer was ate which was kept cold with a generator. I realized that # 10 cans were too big for my wife and I to eat before it spoiled. So I started to buy the smaller cans which cost more but would serve us better.
Just starting your lists, found you through http://www.survivalblog.com/
I do have at least a year of supplies put back, but you’re lists may help me not miss something. Thanks

Cheryl

I have been reading about dehydrating frozen vegestables…is it possible to dehydrate canned vegestables? maby to use for soups etc. Would you consider have a week talking about food dehydration? I just printed off
all the weeks you have listed to put in a binder to keep..

Thank you so much for this information

lin

Canned food is not a good choice to dehydrate. It is already cooked and processed. dehydrating it and then using those vegetables in further cooking would suck the life and nutrition out of them. Plus, most canned veggies have added salt. this added salt interferes with the rehydration process when you go to use your dehydrated veggies. Frozen veggies are already blanched and full of nutrition and unprocessed for the most part. They dehydrate at 125 degrees for about 8 hours in your food dehydrator. You would just cut open your 1 lb bag of frozen veggies, put them on the trays, and you dehydrate them easily. Hope this helps

vicky

This is a good idea. One thing I found several years ago at Salvation Army was one of the old Swing Away wall mount can openers. It was barely used. It has been invaluable in my house. It always works and no more of those handhelds for me unless we’re camping! It was the best $.99 I’ve spent!

Kimok

In addition on the action items : prepare own or family pictures(each 2, plastic coated). and decide the meeting place when emergency. the pictures will be used for when you couldn’t meet them. write down next meeting place on the back of the picture.

Gramas

I love your lists and the advice you have given for us all to read and learn from. I have been a survivalist for many years and have trained my children as they were growing up how to deal with being in the woods. But now at my old age I would have to stay and protect my home, so the putting back for that “rainy day” has always been on going.
But your never to old to learn something new as they say and keep up the great work!

danny gaddis

i see alot of talk about rotating stocks to keep them fresh.. i see this as extra work, especially when you deal with large amounts of supplies for a large group. i skip this and just eliminate stock that is very old or stale…i look at food storage as insurance…if pay auto insurance for a year and don’t use it..that’s a good thing…old canned meat can go to the dogs and veggies can go in the compost pile..they serve their purpose by being there if and when i need them, like insurance does…this way i can spend more time refining my prepping strategies…just found your site..so far so good

Nola

If you don’t usually drink juice, don’t count on it! My son had to have an opperation due to MD. The Nutritionist at the hospital insisted that children drink juice. He got Diarhirra as a result of drinking juice, which he was not used to. He was almost sent home to wait for another date until I explained to the drs that I didnot give him juice, but REAL fruit, not the result of what was left after squeezing, filtering, dehydrating and rehydrating of fruit. When they let him eat what he was used to, he was fine and recieved his opperation.

Kim

Is this list per day? I get the two jars of PB but only two cans of tuna and two cans of soup per person for two weeks obviously isn’t enough. Did I miss something? Thanks in advance for clearing up my confusion.

http://www.readynutrition.com Tess Pennington

Hi Kim,

These lists are weekly suggestions of how you can ready in 52 weeks.

Nunuv Yurbiz

You mean, you should be buying this list each week for the next 52 weeks? That doesn’t make sense. That would leave you with 104 jars of peanut butter per person, 52 can openers, etc. It starts off right – 1 gallon per person per day for 14 days. The rest should continue with that – 1 oz. (or whatever) of peanut butter per person per day for 14 days, etc. Anyway, that’s how I think about food: how much per person per day, and I come up with 1 gallon of water, 2 cans of meat (e.g., tuna), 2 cans of veggies, 1 oz. of PB, etc. Even better, think of it in terms of how many calories per person per day. Malnutrition takes a while, so any mix of food to get to the right number of calories should carry you for a while.

Dave

If you mix a ratio of 1/3 Karo Syrup with 2/3 Peanut Butter, it makes a nice tasting meal/snack that is loaded with energy from the syrup and protein from the Peanut Butter. It goes well on crackers as well. Both of these items have a long shelf life and they don’t take up a lot of room in the storage pantry.

Kathy

@Stevor and others planning on using your hot water heater as part of your water storage system; please remember to clean out your tank by draining it once a year to get rid of all of the sediment at the bottom of the tank. If you’ve never drained your tank you can expect quite a bit of sediment. As a bonus, this also increases the life of your heating element and all of the other guts of the tank. (grin)

@Tom … we too have experienced real problems with the shelf life of saltines and other crackers. There are types of crackers that have longer shelf lives that might be looking into but every one will have to decide on cost vs. benefit. There are Pilot Crackers which are a kind of LTS food. Then there are Cuban Crackers which are an ethnic food but don’t pack away very well. There are a few other types of ethnic crackers that are more like flat breads that have less fat in them than saltines so don’t go rancid as quickly. Anyway, just a thought.

stevor

As to water, remember you have 20 gallons of water in your water heater that can be gotten out through the bottom spigot

Tom

I dislike telling you this but Saltine Crackers and Graham Crackers are perishable items. They will last about 12-18 months, yes, but nibble on one before you eat it. the reason, the chemical preservatives breakdown and make the crackers really poor tasting. Proven by experience. Use them up once they get six months past expire y.

Julie

has anyone ever heard of using inexpensive calf milk replacer in place of powdered milk in your survival kit?

Dixie Landers

Note to Dave, and everybody else: your thoughts about #10 cans…keep the ones you have, as in an emergency there will be plenty of unprepared neighbors with whom you can share those big cans. Desperate people will appreciate your sharing, for they may have no resources!

Karen

Thank you for putting together this 52-week list! I’ve been struggling with how to start prepping – overwhelmed with the amount of stuff we’ll need and the cost associated with it. This gives me a clear plan to get there, without breaking the bank!

Walt

Good ideas, prepping boils down to common sense for prepping for your family and even pet’s specific needs. All the info a person needs can be found on this and other good web sites. Prepping needs to be at the top of every to do list. Water should be utmost on a prepping list. A person can survive for 30 days without food, but only 3 days without water. As terrible as this may sound, prepping is much more than stocking for a severe storm or catastrophic event, its also about surviving the masses. Besides stocking for your personal needs, a person must be equipped and mentally prepared for defensive action.

Riverine man

Concerning the wipes for elderly and babies…. I would suggest getting them for everyone. Having been in areas where having to use wipes for bathing I can say with certainty it makes you feel more human to be able to use them.

Usiku

Thanks for bringing this valuable resource together in a chewable format.

ReconVeteran

I am glad that my family does not live in the city or small villages. A lot of us country folks have already come together to help one another. We hunt together, the women folk cook together, can together make clothes for family members. WE might not live real close to one another but if a national emergency happens you’ll be surprised how fast we come together, and we will defend what is ours. Don’t figure to many will want to come up into the mountains of Tennessee and the Carolinas. Not a good place to go and try to steal stuff. Know what I mean?
SEMPER FI !!

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